Susan Crawford
Susan Crawford   grew up in Miami, Florida, where she spent her childhood adoring her   older sister, reading mysteries in a hammock strung between two Banyan   trees, and collecting lizards, baby skunks and other odd, exotic  creatures.
She  later moved to New York City and then to Boston before settling in   Atlanta to raise three amazing daughters and to teach in various adult   education settings. A member of The Atlanta Writers Club and The  Village  Writers, Crawford works for the Department of Technical and  Adult  Education and is a member of her local planning commission. She  lives in  Atlanta with her husband and a trio of rescue cats, where she  enjoys  reading books, writing books, rainy days, and spending time with  the  people she loves.
Crawford's new novel is The Other Widow. From her Q & A at The Writing Well:
Q. Your first book dealt with mental illness in that your main character suffered from bi-polar condition. This book the insurance investigator is an Iraqi War veteran with PTSD. What is it about psychological issues that you are drawn to write about in your stories? Why is that compelling for you as a storyteller?Visit Susan Crawford's website.
Susan: It’s almost impossible to get through life without some kind of psychological issue unless you live in a box, which would create even more psychological issues, actually! I think many mental illnesses are the result of horrific experiences – normal reactions to abnormal situations that change the lens through which we see the world. Maggie, for example, has PTSD because she nearly died, because she was in a war zone, because she couldn’t help her friends. People are often judged for being different, for seeing things differently, so basically they’re stigmatized for...[read on]
The Page 69 Test: The Other Widow.
--Marshal Zeringue
